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Calendar: Film Listings

Oliver & Company

Directed By: George Scribner
Starring: Joey Lawrence, Billy Joel, Cheech Marin, Richard Mulligan, Roscoe Lee Browne, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Dom Deluise, Taureen Blaque, Robert Loggia, Bette Midler
(G, 73 min.)

There's a lot right with this updated version of Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist, in which abandoned kitty Oliver (Lawrence) falls in with a streetwise band of canine pickpockets in Manhattan. Billy Joel (who performs a song early in the movie) makes a very respectable movie debut, lending his voice to the production as the fast-talking leader of the pack, Dodger. Dom DeLuise, his voice drooping with style, plays Fagin, the sadsack human “patron” of the group, with world-weary resignation. The Divine Miss M. is deliciously campy as the voice of a pampered poodle who controls the Park Avenue household that adopts Oliver. Cheech Marin gives the film some local color with his spunky interpretation of a likeable but hyperactive Chihuahua. So what's wrong with Disney's 27th full-length animated feature? Its biggest problem is that it's too short -- a cheap shot, I suppose, given the high cost of animated features. But the point is Disney's always prided itself on sparing no expense for the sake of a good story, and this one's pretty skimpy: The characters, though colorful, are not fleshed out, and the doggy pickpockets' milieu is given short shrift in favor of the show-off computer animation techniques that surround the villain Sykes (Loggia) and his digs. Worse, the movie suffers from a subtle but crucial failure to engage. The evil here, personified by Sykes, is pedestrian; He's too ugly and too mean to be really frightening. Danger's never clear and present, but rather a convention. Simply put, Oliver & Company didn't work for me not because I'm many years past my sixth birthday but because it never scared me into forgetting that fact. ///Excerpted from Marie Mahoney's Austin Chronicle review than ran when the movie was originally released.

  Marie Mahoney [1988-11-18]

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